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Article of the Week – A.o.W. How to annotate. What is Article of the Week?. Several times during the year, on a Monday, you will receive a non-fiction article to read. It will not necessarily be every week, but you have that week to work on it.
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Article of the Week – A.o.W. How to annotate
What is Article of the Week? • Several times during the year, on a Monday, you will receive a non-fiction article to read. It will not necessarily be every week, but you have that week to work on it. • You will read the article, make comments on it (we’ll talk about that in a minute), and write a reflection. • Both the article and the reflection are always due on the following Friday.
A.o.W.: Write on it? • You will be learning how to “annotate” an article. • Active readers do this. • It simply means to “take notes in your text.”
Why annotate? • Annotating helps you… • stay focused while you read. • be involved with the text. • monitor and improve your comprehension.
What will I need? • Since you are writing on your text, you will need a pencil and a highlighter.
How to annotate • While you are reading the Article of the Week (A.o.W.) • Underline important terms. • Circle definitions and meanings. • Write key words and definitions in the margins. • Signal where important information can be found with key words or symbols in the margin.
How to annotate (more) • While you are reading the Article of the Week (A.o.W.) • Write short summaries in the margin at the end of a chunk of text. • Write any questions you have, and any ideas that occur to you.
How to annotate (more) • While you are reading the Article of the Week (A.o.W.) • Indicate steps in a process by using numbers in the margin. • Step #1 #2 #3 #4 #5
How to annotate (more) • While you are reading the Article of the Week (A.O.W.) • Add comments about connections you make to the text, questions you have, and any ideas that occur to you. • Connections include text-to-self, text-to-text, and text-to-world.
Turning in your Article of the Week (A.o.W.) • On Fridays, you will submit the article itself. • Your teacher will check your annotating: • How much did you write on the text (A.o.W)? • How much thinking is shown in the annotating?
Turning in your Article of the Week (A.o.W.) • As a general rule: • The more writing on the text and in the margins, the better the grade. • Neatness counts! If your teacher can’t read your annotating, then there is a problem. • Use a pencil; inky mistakes show that you don’t care about how you represent yourself through your work.
Turning in your Article of the Week (A.o.W.) • What can bring this grade down? • Don’t bother turning it in. • LAZY! • Turn in a weak product that is barely annotated. • Why bother doing anything if you don’t put forth your best effort. You are annotating because you need to! You are doing what “good readers” do!
Turning in your Article of the Week (A.o.W.) • What can bring this grade down? • Do only one part of the A.o.W. • Your grade reflects your effort. Doing partial work will earn you partial credit, like a 50 percent. • Don’t worry about really thinking about the A.o.W. Just write anything at the last minute.
Turning in your Article of the Week (A.o.W.) • Along with the annotating, you must turn in a one-page written reflection about the A.o.W. • Typed preferably, but handwritten will do (please write neatly) • Neat • One full page
Turning in your Article of the Week (A.o.W.) • Your one-page reflection may include any combination of these: • A general summary of the article. • Reference to some questions and comments that you annotated in the margins. • Your stance of why or why not you agree with the author. • Your favorite part of the article with an explanation of why you liked it.
Turning in your Article of the Week (A.o.W.) • Your one-page reflection may include any combination of these: • Exploration of some of the questions raised by the A.o.W. • What else the article relates to in the world or your experience • A personal connection to the A.o.W.